Extending health spans

by | April 26, 2023

The Dynamic Resilience Programme aims to identify and validate health resilience measures and models, and develop and test new interventions to improve health outcomes in older people after stress events.

 

Wellcome Leap and Temasek Trust have partnered to launch a US$60 million (around S$80 million) Dynamic Resilience programme aimed at increasing health spans. Average human life expectancy has doubled from 35 to 70 years over the past century, but health spans have not correspondingly improved. Data shows that worldwide, more than one in two adults aged over 60 have multimorbidity, or multiple co-existing health issues. This and decreasing dynamic resilience – the ability to respond to and cope with stress – contribute to clinical frailty which makes us vulnerable to sudden and serious health deterioration in the event of acute illness or injury.

Multimorbidity poses an urgent challenge for health services and this is set to increase in the coming decades. Frailty affects up to half of adults over 65 globally, and people who have experienced traumatic injury, cancer treatment or menopause. Frailty reduces our ability to live independently and increases the likelihood of falls, hospitalisation, the need for long-term care and death. The negative impact of frailty and age-related ill health on patients, their families, caregivers and societies, is unsustainable. The Dynamic Resilience programme aims to reduce frailty progression by 25 percent which could prevent 71,000 hospitalisations and 8,000 deaths annually from falls in the US alone and benefit 87 million older adults globally.

“The World Health Organization estimates that by 2030, one in six people globally will be aged 60 years and above, and many will be afflicted with multiple co-existing health conditions. Our partnership with Wellcome Leap to further the research on Dynamic Resilience is aimed at extending health spans – the number of years spent in good health – so that more people can live fuller and healthier lives for longer,” said Desmond Kuek, CEO, Temasek Trust.

Ageing does not have to mean poor health. The rising number of centenarians and supercentenarians shows humans can live well for a long time. These resilient individuals enjoy good health for most of their lives and can bounce back from significant stress events. Resilience offers a new way to understand health spans and how to prevent frailty and the age-related coexistence of multiple chronic health conditions.

Shared Dr Regina E Dugan, CEO, Wellcome Leap: “We all share a desire to be healthy and live independently to our last breath. To do so, we will need to be able to measure, support and maintain robust levels of dynamic resilience.”

New therapies have been developed to combat age-related diseases and frailty, but clinical trials are hindered by the lack of reliable biomarkers for resilience and frailty, incomplete understanding of resilience mechanisms, and a lack of mechanism-targeting interventions to prevent health deterioration. Current frailty scores and indices can provide reasonable predictions of statistical outcomes after a stress event, but not outcomes for an individual.

The three-year Dynamic Resilience programme has three goals:
(1) to identify new biomarker signatures of resilience that predict health outcomes after a stress event using collections of biological specimens and associated health data that have been collected from individuals over time;
(2) to understand what causes frailty and resilience, using lab tests to assess the effects of stress on biological systems at different levels of complexity, including cells, tissues, and whole organisms; and
(3) to test ways to improve biological resilience in at-risk people prior to predictable stress events like surgery, targeting reduction to further frailty or death by at least 25 percent in intervention versus control groups.

The call for abstracts and proposals to meet programme goals is currently open.

 

(** PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash/Haydn Golden)

1 Comment

  1. Stephen Teng

    Seniors tend to be stiff & frail. To overcome this condition, one has to do free hand stretching exercise from top to toes for at at least 15 minutes morning & evening daily. I am aged 83 with no medical condition or even on any medication. I also keep my mind active by taking part in rebuttel over the internet daily from 8 am to 10 pm.

    Reply

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